Who's Blaming Whom

Where the fingers are pointing in the Bush administration meltdown.

As clichés go, "It's not the crime, it's the coverup" is a pretty useful one. And it's particularly apt in the train wreck that is the Bush administration's U.S. attorney purge. Sure, the underlying act that's alleged—firing only those U.S. attorneys who didn't measure up as "loyal Bushies"—was a bad one. But what seems to have undone the once-leviathan Bush administration is the fact that everyone's lying about it. Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty apparently admitted both too little and too much in one brief briefing. And those admissions have triggered the kind of scrambling and finger-pointing we've never seen from this administration.

Had McNulty not claimed before the Senate on Feb. 6 that six of the fired U.S. attorneys had been let go for "performance-related" issues, he would not have infuriated those lawyers into defending their performance. And had he not had one dumb moment of pure honesty—admitting that a seventh was fired just to make room for a former Rove aide—he might not have illuminated more than the White House cared to reveal. And without these assertions (bear in mind that Harriet Miers advised him to deny, deny, deny), McNulty might not have implicated his colleagues at the Justice Department and the White House and turned them into liars and finger-pointers as well.

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It's not easy to keep track of who in the Bush administration did what and whose lies contradict whose. A chart helps. So here's a roundup of some of what we now know.

The trigger: McNulty's claim that the firings were a routine personnel matter based on the ousted prosecutors' "performance."

"the phone calls that were made back in December were performance-related."

• March 2, 2005, e-mails from Kyle Sampson to Harriet Miers ranking all U.S. attorneys for such qualities as "loyalty to the President and Attorney General" and praising "the vast majority of US Attorneys, 80-85 percent, I would guess, are doing a great job, are loyal bushies, etc."

• May 11, 2006, e-mail from Sampson to deputy White House counsel referencing "the real problem we have right now with Carol Lam ... we should have someone ready to be nominated on 11/18, the day her 4-year term expires." This, one day after Lam seeks more indictments in the "Duke" Cunningham prosecution.

• April 4, 2006, participates in conference call with Sampson and others to hear complaints from Sen. Pete

• "'The White House did not play a role in the list of the seven U.S. attorneys," Dan Bartlett.

• Justice Department released a letter indicating it was not aware that Rove had played any role in the decision to appoint one of his former deputies as U.S. attorney in Arkansas.

Blames Sampson and other subordinates Says in March 13, 2007, press conference: "I knew my chief of staff was involved in the

process of determining who were the weak performers ..."

•March 26, 2007, says in NBC interview: "If I find out that, in fact, any of these decisions were motivated, the recommendations to me were motivated for improper reasons to interfere with the public corruption case, there will be swift and —there will be swift and decisive action."

Silence

Blames Goodling and Sampson

Told Sen. Schumer: [paraphrasing] "I am sorry that I didn't tell you the truth. I was not told that these things were happening by the people who were supposed to brief me."

Confusion

March 16, 2007, statement via his lawyer that he "did not resign because he had misled anyone at the Justice Department or withheld information concerning the replacement of the U.S. Attorneys." But because "he had let the Attorney General down in failing to appreciate the need for a . . . political response to the unfounded accusations."

Blames McNulty

In a March 26 letter to the Senate judiciary committee, Goodling's lawyer says that a DoJ official (presumably Paul McNulty) blames Goodling for failing to "inform him of certain pertinent facts." Thus she cannot testify. Also she blames the Senate panel for being biased against her.

Conflicts with:

• June 20, 2006, e-mail from Rove's deputy asking Monica Goodling to meet with GOP folk unhappy with David Iglesias.

calendar page indicating hourlong Nov. 27 meeting with AG and at least five top DoJ officials discussing a five-step plan for carrying out the firings.

• Jan 6, 2005, e-mail from Colin Newman "Karl Rove stopped by to ask you (roughly quoting) 'how we planned to proceed regarding US Attorneys, whether we were going to allow all to stay, request resignations from all and accept only some of them, or selectively replace them, etc.

Jan 9, 2005, e-mail from Kyle Sampson to deputy White House counsel suggesting that "Judge [Gonzales] and I discussed briefly a couple of weeks ago ... As an operational matter, we would like to replace 15-20 percent of the current US Attorneys - the underperforming ones."

"All but one of the U.S. attorneys recently fired by the Justice Department had positive job reviews before they were dismissed, but many ran into political trouble with Washington."

Statement by Gonzales, in press conference of March 13, 2007, that Sampson left because "incomplete information was communicated ... to the

Congress … and I am very dismayed that that may not have occurred here."

Mass of e-mails show Goodling heavily involved in planning purge; in efforts at damage control; and in attempt to get Tim Griffin the U.S. attorney job in Arkansas. E-mails also link her to Sampson and Rove's deputy, Scott Jennings.

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